Mac starts watching Community, Erich rages against the NBC machine, Dave sacrifices his life to the world of Skyrim, and Steve pops his inadvertently sleazy cherry. Plus! Fantasy characters you would hate to play in an RPG, Scenes from a cemetery, Signs of the zodiac, and Actors whom you've seen criminally few of their movies.

Celebrating their 25th F This Movie! collaboration, Patrick and JB cut through the pea soup that is Frank Darabont's The Mist; postulate on conspiracy theories, ironic climaxes, and religion in movies; and agree that denial is a powerful thing.

This week, Clark offers up music from films which prominently feature the FBI. You'll hear selections from Public Enemies, The Silence of the Lambs, The Siege, Breach, Donnie Brasco, The Rock, and Catch Me If You Can. Plus, in keeping with the theme, his review of Clint Eastwood's sluggish biopic J. Edgar.

Michael and Melissa are back in the saddle for a look at your week in entertainment. Adam Sandler vs. an animated cat, the beginning of the end of The Twilight Saga, new Sylvester and Tweety, Oscars no good horrible very bad 48 hrs, Donald Glover does stand-up, Tom Hanks goes to community college, The Office UK comes to Netflix streaming, the Duggars get pregnant again, Quentin Tarantino assembles the greatest cast in history, Bring It On goes Broadway, even more Wimpy Kid, how much famous authors actually write themselves, and much more.

This week, the boys grab their axes and chainmail and get lost in the Misty Mountains, Mead Halls, and loose Women of SKYRIM! There may be talk of other games, but it all seems futile and without merit after experiencing Bethesda's latest Elder Scrolls epic.

A very busy Kent and Michelle settle into a twice monthly schedule, meaning each new episode is packed with twice entertainment. This week: What to expect from the holiday movie season, reviews of Puss in Boots and The Muppet Movie, reviving The Muppets for a new generation, fall television report card thus far, comparing/contrasting Grimm and Once Upon a Time, and psychoanalyzing Kent's fear of strong females.

This week, Clark explores another batch of new and recent releases, offering musical selections from Puss in Boots, The Rum Diary, In Time, A Dangerous Method, My Week with Marilyn, The Artist, and War Horse. Clark also offers his thoughts on the new Brett Ratner comedy Tower Heist, and a handful of DVD and Blu-ray releases.